Rain hammered the streets like gunfire. Neon signs flickered, half-broken, washing the alleyways in pink and blue. Marcus Hale ducked under a low fire escape, the weight of the diamond sat heavy in his pocket. The heist should have been simple. It wasn’t. Not even close.
“Move faster!” hissed Lena Voss behind him. Her hair plastered to her face, eyes wild. “They’re on our tail!”
Marcus didn’t answer. He never did. He ran. Not because he was scared, well, maybe a little—but because hesitation got people killed. And he hated getting killed.
They rounded a corner. Wet asphalt slick under their boots. Three black SUVs cut the street ahead. Heads turned inside. Guns. Lots of them. Assassins. Professional. Not here for money, they were here to kill.
Lena swore. “Shit. They’ve got...”
A bullet slammed into the wall next to Marcus’ head, spraying concrete dust. He ducked, rolled, and kicked a dumpster across the alley. Metal screamed and sparks flew. One SUV skidded. Tires squealed.
Marcus grabbed Lena’s arm. “Go. Now.”
She followed, clutching the jewel like it was her heartbeat. Every step a gamble. Every breath a countdown.
They darted into the subway. The smell of wet rats and rust filled their noses. Marcus knew the tunnels. Knew the exits. Knew that somewhere beneath the city, death could wait around every corner. And it did.
A figure stepped from the shadows. Tall. Muscular. Masked. A sniper? A killer? Marcus didn’t wait. He swung first, a right hook that cracked ribs. The man staggered, barely audible grunt escaping his lips. Lena kicked him hard. They ran.
The tunnel split. Left or right? Marcus chose instinct. Always instinct. His boots pounded concrete, echoing like war drums. Another gunshot ricocheted off the wall. Too close. He could feel the heat of a bullet whisper across his shoulder.
“Up here!” Lena yelled. She’d spotted the maintenance ladder. Metal clanged under their weight as they climbed.
At street level, rain still fell. The SUVs were gone. Gone, but not far.
Marcus didn’t pause. He led Lena through side streets, into the abandoned warehouse district. Doors hung open. Shadows shifted. Silence reigned, but Marcus knew it was the kind of silence that screamed.
Inside the warehouse, Marcus’s plan, improvised but solid, took shape. They barricaded the entrance with pallets and rusted beams. Heavy breathing, wet clothes, hearts hammering.
Lena looked at him. “We can’t keep running forever.”
Marcus wiped rain from his brow. “No. But we can end it.”
End it meant setting a trap. It meant using brains over bullets. It meant taking the diamond, and their lives, back into their hands.
Minutes later, the assassins came. Four men, shadows moving like predators. Guns raised, eyes cold. Marcus didn’t wait. He threw a canister of flammable liquid into the center of the room. “Now!” he barked.
Flames erupted. Smoke choked the air. The first assassin fired blindly, coughing, staggering. Marcus grabbed a steel pipe. One hit, two hits, bodies went down. Lena swung a chain, catching another across the face.
The last man ran, but Marcus anticipated. A kick to the knee. A punch to the jaw. He hit the ground, but Marcus didn’t. Not until the man stopped moving.
Silence, finally. Smoke curling around rusted beams. Rain dripping through broken windows. Lena dropped to her knees, gasping. Marcus held the diamond out to her.
“You ever wanna do that again?” he asked, tone dry, dripping water.
She stared at him. Then laughed. Short, sharp, adrenaline-laced. “Not unless I’m dead broke.”
Marcus smirked. He always smirked after surviving. Always.
They stepped out into the rain. The city lights reflecting off puddles. The diamond burned cold in Lena’s hand. Safe. For now.
Somewhere far away, sirens screamed. Somewhere else, other assassins prepared. But Marcus Hale didn’t care. Not tonight. He’d survived. They’d survived. And the diamond…well, the diamond could wait for a new heist.
For Marcus, that was enough. For Lena, too.
The rain kept falling. And the city waited.
END